Form with which the stockholders of a corporation record the contents of their annual meeting.
Form with which the stockholders of a corporation record the contents of their annual meeting.
How to write meeting minutes Organization name. Meeting purpose. Start and end times. Date and location. List of attendees and absentees, if necessary. Space for important information like motions passed or deadlines given. Space for your signature and the meeting leader's signature.
After each meeting, the secretary should work to distribute the minutes to other board members as soon as possible. This is especially important if there are action items to address.
Robert's Rules (Section -16) state that “the minutes should contain mainly a record of what was done at the meeting, not what was said by the members.” Minutes are not transcripts of meetings; rather, the document contains a record of actions taken by the body, organized by the meeting's order of business (agenda).
Meeting minutes should be distributed promptly after the meeting, ideally within 24 to 48 hours. Timely distribution ensures that participants have a fresh understanding of discussions, decisions, and action items.
Taking minutes is a hard process that requires great attention to detail. A better practice is often to record your meetings and then get the minutes professionally transcribed by a dedicated transcription service.
Multiple company secretaries have also told us that, as a rule of thumb, they spend four hours writing minutes for every hour of meeting time. This isn't surprising when you consider that the transcript of an hour's worth of conversation can reach 10,000 words and 20 pages of A4.
What Should Be Included in Meeting Minutes? Date and time of the meeting. Names of the meeting participants and those unable to attend (e.g., “regrets”) Acceptance or corrections/amendments to previous meeting minutes. Decisions made about each agenda item, for example: Actions taken or agreed to be taken. Next steps.
Include the key elements like the meeting date and place, meeting attendees, agenda items, record decisions, actions, talking points, and deadlines. Formatting is a key. Make meeting minutes visually appealing and easy to read with proper spacing, bulleted lists, summary tables, and highlighted titles and keywords.
What to include Meeting date, time and location. Names of the committee or other group holding the meeting, the Chair and Secretary. List of those present, including guests in attendance, and any recorded regrets/absences. A record of formal motions and outcomes.
Minutes should include the following: Date and time of meeting. Place of meeting. Members present. Members absent. Invited guests present. Agenda items. Actions voted (number by month and year only the voted actions) Major discussion items (even though no action voted)